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Old 7th September 2008, 01:12 AM   #1
ward
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dating is done by koftkagari as I mentionened that was on 1st blush if I see a closeup I may change my opinion. The decoration looks original not a late addition
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Old 7th September 2008, 05:25 AM   #2
inveterate
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A TRULY UNIQUE AND FANTASTIC EXAMPLE. CONGRATULATIONS. ROD
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Old 7th September 2008, 08:06 AM   #3
Gonzalo G
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I´m sorry, Ward. I found two ways to understand your statement, and I only wanted to be sure. Thank you for your response. In which way the koftgari of the 19th Century is different from the made in the 18th Century?

RSWORD, would be you so kind as to give measures and weight of your piece? I would think that the blade itself is thin for a khukri, but wisely reinforced with the "T" back to give rigidity and the piece with koftgari decoration which goes over the blade (I don´t recall it´s proper name in english in this moment), to give amortiguation against vibrations. This piece is another unique feature on a khukri. But I can be wrong, as a thicker blade would give a maximum performance to this khukri. Thank you for your attention.

My best regards

Gonzalo

Last edited by Gonzalo G; 7th September 2008 at 08:23 AM.
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Old 7th September 2008, 01:26 PM   #4
scratch
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G'day Rsword,
It is always good to see a new, to me, style of kukri!
Thank you for sharing
To display my own ignorance I had thought this piece to be a relative of the tulwar handled similiar bladed examples(The T spine does not extend as far)
Congratulations on a knowledgeable acquisition

Cheers,

Dan
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Old 7th September 2008, 08:45 PM   #5
RSWORD
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Thanks for all the feedback. The blade, when measured along the spine, is a tad over 14" long. The longer handle helps give the blade a nice feel and while not a big, heavy blade, the blade does have some heft to it. I am afraid I do not have a proper scale to weight it. The POB is 2 centimeters past the cho. The blade shape reminds me a bit of a Sossun Pata and perhaps the maker of this blade was familiar with those swords and incorporated some of those features, ie, T-back spine with hollow grind and beveled edge.

I'll try and post some close up pictures of the koftgari later this evening.
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Old 7th September 2008, 11:58 PM   #6
Atlantia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RSWORD
I'll try and post some close up pictures of the koftgari later this evening.

I fear that may push us from being a collectors forum... to a porn site. ;-)
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Old 8th September 2008, 03:26 AM   #7
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What a beauty!!....just an amazingly elegant piece of unmatched quality!
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Old 8th September 2008, 01:28 PM   #8
Gonzalo G
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RSWORD
The blade shape reminds me a bit of a Sossun Pata and perhaps the maker of this blade was familiar with those swords and incorporated some of those features, ie, T-back spine with hollow grind and beveled edge.
Yes, it resembles the sossun pata of the type Rawson calls "islamic form" (photo No. 1) and not the one he calls "hindu form" (photo No. 11), on "The Indian Sword". Also, he presents a khukri similar in some way to yours, with metal handle and the piece over the blade covered by koftgari, but with a very different form of hilt and blade and without kaudi (photo No. 26). Yours looks much better.

Thank you very much for your response.
Regards

Gonzalo
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Old 3rd December 2013, 04:35 PM   #9
youngbladerunner
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Default My wootz Kukri

I bought this kukri recently. Unique peice possibly?
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